Susan Glaspell AKA Susan Keating Glaspell Born: 1-Jul-1882 Birthplace: Davenport, IA Died: 27-Jul-1948 Location of death: Provincetown, MA Cause of death: Pneumonia Remains: Buried, Snow Cemetery, Truro, MA
Gender: Female Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Playwright, Novelist Nationality: United States Executive summary: Provincetown Players With her husband Glaspell co-founded the Provincetown Players, an acting troupe, in 1915, a group instrumental in the success of America's best-known playwright, Eugene O'Neill. Husband: George Cram Cook (m. 1913, d. 1924) Husband: Norman H. Matson
University: Drake University (1899)
Pulitzer Prize for Drama 1931 for Alison's House Des Moines Daily News Reporter (1899-1901)
Author of books:
The Glory of the Conquered (1909, novel) The Visioning (1911, novel) Lifted Masks (1912, short stories) Fidelity (1915, novel) The Road to the Temple (1927, biography, of her husband Cook) Brook Evans (1928, novel) Fugitive's Return (1929, novel) A Jury of Her Peers (1929, short stories) Ambrose Holt and Family (1931, novel) The Morning Is Near Us (1939, novel) Norman Ashe (1942, novel) Judd Rankin's Daughter (1945, novel)
Wrote plays:
Suppressed Desires (1915, with Cook) Trifles (1916) Close the Book (1917) A Woman's Hour (1918) Tickless Time (1919) Bernice (1919) Inheritors (1921) The Verge (1921) The Comic Artist (1927) Alison's House (1930)
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